Review
In this landmark text, [the authors] have given a voice to a population and attention to a problem that heretofore has been overlooked, underserved, or inappropriately treated. Readers will find within these pages a wealth of ways to productively work with addicted women and girls. This book is both a first and a foremost contribution to the field of addiction.
Samuel T. Gladding, PhD, professor and chair of the Department of Counseling at Wake Forest University; former president of the American Counseling Association
In a field with no shortage of literature on addiction focused on men and boys, Women, Girls, and Addiction is crucial to developing effective helping approaches with women and girls. Briggs and Pepperell deliver a thorough and informative research- and practice-based exploration of addiction from a feminist perspective that takes into account various sociological, cultural and contextual realities that converge and interact.
Hugh C. Crethar, PhD, is an Associate Professor of Counseling & Counseling Psychology at Oklahoma State University
As Cyndi Briggs and Jennifer Pepperell mention in this book, men and women differ on many levels, yet, for some reason, therapeutic treatment for them does not. This becomes problematic in treating females exhibiting addictive behaviors, as the current methods of treatment fail to focus on the relational and cultural aspects of women and the possible underlying reasons they suffer from substance or process addictions. Briggs and Pepperell offer empowering approaches of working with females across the lifespan in addictions treatment, taking into consideration the multifaceted contexts of women’s lives. A feminist perspective in working with women, particularly in addictions, has been needed in mental health!
Dr. Kelly L. Wester is an assistant professor in the Counselor Education department at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro
Product Description
"Women, Girls, and Addiction" is the first book on the efficacy of treatment approaches and interventions that are tailored to working with addicted women, and the first publication of any kind to provide a feminist approach to understanding the experience of addiction. Part One of the book provides an overview of feminist theory and addiction counseling, followed by an historical look at women and addiction (research, treatment, demongraphics). The three chapters in Part Two give an in-depth look at the Biological, Psychological, and Social factors of the experience of addiction as unique in women. The final section of the book presents a series of chapters spanning the lifespan, which will each feature age-specific special issues, treatment strategies, interventions, and commonly encountered topics in therapy with the population.
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